Digital citizenship:
IB Quote: 1.12 Digital citizenship
What is the one thing everybody should know how to do??? -- instead of teaching them so many different things teach them how to find the help button on the software and let them find their own way around the computer/phone/ipad Class Notes (Board picture from the 19th Sept):
Digital citizenship can be defined as appropriate behaviour that represents the responsible, ethical and legal approach that individuals take in any situation with respect to the use of IT. Digital citizenship permeates, in one way or another, all of the preceding social and ethical considerations.
Notes:
What is Digital Citizenship?
Digital Citizenship Definition
Digital citizenship can be defined as the laws that one is required to follow to be part of the "digital nation". As the IB definition says that you have to be responsible in these aspects
Ethical
Moral
Legal
Standards and Policies try to enforce laws on people, but digital citizenship is common sense on how to use technology and this is not mandatory, this is the main difference between policies and digital citizenship.
Digital citizenship could also be defined as someone that "regularly accesses and uses the internet to their benefit" (K.Mossberg)
YouTube Digital Citizen Curriculum
Be a Digital Citizen
Digital Citizen Participation (how people contribute to the digital world)
There are two different kinds on Digital Citizen Participation
Information Distribution
Static Static information distribution is based on read-only web sites with information. Examples of these are Information Portal Sites and Links to Related Web Sites.
Dynamic As dynamic information distribution means active Two-way communication this it includes the gaining of information by E-Mail requests (question-answer dialogue), Newsletters or Newsgroups and E-mail lists.
Citizen Deliberation
Static Usually, Static Deliberation includes the following kinds of participation Online Poll, Bulletin Board (for both complaints and recommendations).Example: “Dorris recalls that during the unprecedented week long federal government shutdown from a blizzard in the Washington, D.C., area in 2010, the Web manager group collaborated to use its websites and the GSA-owned portal, USA.gov, to inform citizens about which federal offices were closed and which were still operating”.
Dynamic Dynamic Deliberation takes place in the public sphere for example Digital Forums, Online Voting with Deliberation. Mike Ribble runs a website dedicated to describing digital citizenship in all its meaning. Through his teachings at the high school and university graduate level, and through the culmination of a dissertation specifically engaged with digital citizenry, he has compiled a list of nine elements comprising digital citizenship, including digital: access, commerce, communication, literacy, etiquette, law, rights and responsibilities, health and wellness, and security. (http://www.digitalcitizenship.net/Home_Page.htm).
IB Quote:
1.12 Digital citizenship
What is the one thing everybody should know how to do???
-- instead of teaching them so many different things teach them how to find the help button on the software and let them find their own way around the computer/phone/ipad
Class Notes (Board picture from the 19th Sept):
Digital citizenship can be defined as appropriate behaviour that represents the responsible, ethical
and legal approach that individuals take in any situation with respect to the use of IT. Digital citizenship permeates, in one way or another, all of the preceding social and ethical considerations.
Notes:
What is Digital Citizenship?
Digital Citizenship Definition
Digital citizenship can be defined as the laws that one is required to
follow to be part of the "digital nation". As the IB definition says that
you have to be responsible in these aspects
Standards and Policies try to enforce laws on people, but digital citizenship
is common sense on how to use technology and this is not mandatory, this
is the main difference between policies and digital citizenship.
Digital citizenship could also be defined as someone that "regularly
accesses and uses the internet to their benefit" (K.Mossberg)
YouTube Digital Citizen Curriculum
Be a Digital Citizen
Digital Citizen Participation (how people contribute to the digital world)
There are two different kinds on Digital Citizen Participation
Information Distribution
Static
Static information distribution is based on read-only web sites with information.
Examples of these are Information Portal Sites and Links to Related Web Sites.
Dynamic
As dynamic information distribution means active Two-way communication
this it includes the gaining of information by E-Mail requests
(question-answer dialogue), Newsletters or Newsgroups and E-mail lists.
Citizen Deliberation
Static
Usually, Static Deliberation includes the following kinds of participation Online Poll, Bulletin Board (for both complaints and recommendations).Example: “Dorris recalls that during the unprecedented week long federal government shutdown from a blizzard in the Washington, D.C., area in 2010, the Web manager group collaborated to use its websites and the GSA-owned
portal, USA.gov, to inform citizens about which federal offices were closed and which were still operating”.
Dynamic
Dynamic Deliberation takes place in the public sphere for example Digital Forums, Online Voting with Deliberation.
Mike Ribble runs a website dedicated to describing digital citizenship in all its meaning. Through his teachings at the high school and university graduate level, and through the culmination of a dissertation specifically engaged with digital citizenry, he has compiled a list of nine elements comprising digital citizenship, including digital: access, commerce, communication, literacy, etiquette, law, rights and responsibilities, health and wellness, and security. (http://www.digitalcitizenship.net/Home_Page.htm).
HL examples:
Hyperlinks: